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FINSUM

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Monday, 30 June 2025 04:27

Retirees Need Alternative Exposure

In today’s unpredictable economic landscape, retirees face mounting challenges in preserving their wealth as traditional strategies like the 60/40 portfolio falter under inflation and synchronized market downturns. The financial turmoil of recent years has exposed the shortcomings of conventional diversification, especially during crises like 2022 when both stocks and bonds fell sharply, undermining retirees’ income and security. 

 

As a result, many advisors now advocate incorporating alternative investments—such as private equity, real estate, and private credit—into retirement portfolios to broaden exposure and potentially enhance returns. Alternatives offer benefits like access to private markets, higher return potential through illiquidity premiums, and diversification through non-correlated strategies. 

 

Additionally, alternative strategies like managed futures and long/short funds can provide “crisis alpha,” cushioning portfolios during volatile markets. 


Finsum: While these vehicles carry higher fees, tax complexity, and liquidity constraints, their strategic use can help retirees mitigate risk, sustain income, and better navigate an uncertain financial future.

A new provision quietly inserted into President Donald Trump’s latest tax bill would give private equity firms expanded tax breaks when they acquire companies and burden them with debt. This language, buried in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, would increase the allowable deduction on interest payments—effectively subsidizing leveraged buyouts that often result in layoffs, wage cuts, and bankruptcies. 

 

Despite the provision’s potential to drive billions in tax savings for Wall Street, lawmakers have downplayed its implications, describing it only as an increase in business interest deductibility. 

 

By altering how interest deductions are calculated—without raising the 30% cap—the bill could hand private equity firms up to a 15% increase in write-offs, according to legal and budget analysts. Over the next decade, this tax tweak is projected to cost the government $200 billion in lost revenue, deepening concerns about corporate accountability and tax fairness.


Finsum: If CNL capital is a well-positioned private equity firm that could be in a good positon to benefit to these legal changes. 

Tax-efficient investing is gaining momentum, with separately managed accounts (SMAs) emerging as a preferred tool for personalization and tax savings. Unlike mutual funds or ETFs, SMAs allow investors to directly own securities, enabling tailored strategies like tax-loss harvesting. 

 

Assets in tax-managed SMAs have surged past $500 billion, a 67% increase since 2022, with direct indexing leading the way due to its scalability and precision. Asset managers are now extending tax overlays to active equity strategies, though the process is more complex due to potential conflicts with managers’ top stock picks. 

 

Meanwhile, model portfolios are incorporating tax-aware transition tools to help advisors move clients into new strategies with minimal tax impact, further expanding the reach of tax management across investor segments.


Finsum: Fixed-income SMAs offer fewer tax opportunities but can still provide benefits during periods of rate volatility or credit stress.

Model portfolios have transformed from basic investment templates into versatile, sophisticated tools that support a wide range of advisor and client needs. Today, assets in model portfolios are projected to grow to $11 trillion by 2028, fueled by the rising demand for customization and outcome-oriented investment strategies. 

 

The most common models remain asset allocation portfolios, especially those built with open architecture, which allows advisors to incorporate both in-house and third-party managers for added diversification and cost efficiency. 

 

Alongside these, outcome-oriented models—such as those focused on income generation, downside protection, or tax optimization—are gaining popularity for their ability to align with specific client goals. Building block models, which emphasize a particular asset class or investment objective, also offer advisors greater control in tailoring portfolios around their core expertise. 


Finsum: As the model portfolio landscape matures, advisors are increasingly choosing providers that offer a full spectrum of solutions to enhance both operational efficiency and client personalization.

Monday, 30 June 2025 04:20

Diving Into Semiliquid Assets

Semiliquid investment vehicles—including interval funds, tender-offer funds, nontraded REITs, and nontraded BDCs—are becoming a significant bridge between public and private markets, offering investors periodic liquidity and access to traditionally illiquid asset classes. 

 

These vehicles have grown rapidly, with U.S.-based semiliquid assets reaching $344 billion by the end of 2024, driven primarily by demand for private credit strategies that generate consistent income without necessitating frequent redemptions. However, their appeal comes with steep costs: average expense ratios exceed 3%, far above the fees of mutual funds and ETFs, and many carry layered management, incentive, and acquired fund fees that create high performance hurdles for investors. 

 

Leverage plays a substantial role in returns, particularly in credit-focused funds, where income appears more attributable to borrowed capital than superior asset selection. Semiliquid private equity vehicles, on the other hand, have largely underperformed, often failing to match the S&P 500. 


Finsum: These structures expand access to private markets, but investors must weigh the benefits of income and diversification against liquidity constraints.

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